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A workplace-driven model on the formation of OCB-C: perspectives of social exchange theory and agency theory

Shi (Tracy) Xu, Yao-Chin Wang, Emily Ma

International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management

ISSN: 0959-6119

Article publication date: 17 May 2022

Issue publication date: 3 June 2022

2042

Abstract

Purpose

Different from the previous organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) literature, this study aims to propose an OCB-O (organizational citizenship behavior toward organizations) and OCB-I (organizational citizenship behavior toward individual coworkers) driven mechanism for the formation of OCB-C (organizational citizenship behavior toward customers). Based on the social exchange and agency theories, the authors propose that perceived leadership support and work autonomy contribute to both OCB-I and OCB-O, which contributes to proactive and reactive customer service attitude as well as OCB-C.

Design/methodology/approach

A three-wave survey was conducted in five-star hotels in Mainland China, and a sample of 410 hotel frontline employees was used to test the model.

Findings

Findings of the study suggested that perceived leadership support positively led to OCB-O and OCB-I while work autonomy led to OCB-I, demonstrating the importance of employees’ perceived leadership support on motivating employees to perform OCB-I and OCB-O. OCB-I and OCB-O directly improved OCB-C, confirming the proposed spillover effect from OCB-I and OCB-O to OCB-C. OCB-I supported both proactive and reactive customer service attitudes, revealing OCB-I as more effective than OCB-O on influencing employees’ service attitudes. Furthermore, OCB-I, OCB-O and proactive customer service attitude lead to OCB-C.

Practical implications

This study suggests that it is important for leaders to show care and support to employees and design jobs with a certain level of flexibility, so that employees are motivated to go the extra mile to do a good job. When employees make helping others a habit, they will provide more genuine care to customers and do a better job in serving customers.

Originality/value

This study supports the spillover mechanism of OCB-I and OCB-O on OCB-C. Specifically, the spillover mechanism starts from a workplace-driven model with employees’ perceived leadership support and work autonomy to enhance OCB-O as well as OCB-I. Then, spillover effects stem directly from OCB-I and OCB-O to OCB-C and indirectly to proactive customer service attitude.

Keywords

Citation

Xu, S.(T)., Wang, Y.-C. and Ma, E. (2022), "A workplace-driven model on the formation of OCB-C: perspectives of social exchange theory and agency theory", International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, Vol. 34 No. 7, pp. 2684-2703. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-11-2021-1409

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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